+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Exploding The Phone db291 16 Arrested in Trans-U.S. Gaming...

Exploding The Phone db291 16 Arrested in Trans-U.S. Gaming...

Date post: 04-Jul-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 1 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
3
Exploding The Phone www.explodingthephone.com Bibliographic Cover Sheet db291 Title 16 Arrested in Trans-U.S. Gaming Quiz Publication Long Beach Press-Telegram Date 1966-05-25 V/I/P p. 1 Abstract FBI arrests 16 people in 9 states and seeks several more in an interstate gaming investigation. Suspects are charged with various crimes involving blue boxes and interstate gaming. Keywords FBI; gambling; Los Angeles; blue box; Gilbert Lee Beckley (arrested); Milton Lee Boyd (arrested); Herbert Kaufman (arrested); John Owen Tyler (arrested); Henry Edward Loman (arrested); Samuel Green (arrested); Gerald H. Kilgore (arrested); Francisco de Nigris (arrested); Virgil Salathiel (arrested); Harold Mahan (arrrested); Carl J. Clement (arrested); Joseph Soldis (arrested); Robert Pelletier (arrested); Gray Hoffman (arrested); Wallace D. Kies (arrested); Larry L. Simms (arrested); Dr. Milton Birnbaum (suspect); William Ray Davis (suspect); Norman L. Rosenthal (suspect); Eugene A. Nolan (suspect); Alvin K. Bubis (suspect) Source Newspaper Archive The following pages may contain copyrighted material. We believe that our use of this material for non-commercial educational and research purposes constitutes "fair use" under Section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use this material for purposes that go beyond "fair use," you must obtain permission from the copyright owner, if any. While it will make us slightly sad to do so, we will nonetheless comply with requests from copyright owners who want their material removed from our web site.
Transcript
Page 1: Exploding The Phone db291 16 Arrested in Trans-U.S. Gaming Quizexplodingthephone.com/docs/dbx0291.pdf · ing Uganda, reports reaching here said. The T.asi African nation appeared

Exploding The Phonewww.explodingthephone.comBibliographic Cover Sheet

db291

Title 16 Arrested in Trans-U.S. Gaming Quiz

Publication Long Beach Press-Telegram

Date 1966-05-25

V/I/P p. 1

Abstract FBI arrests 16 people in 9 states and seeks several more in aninterstate gaming investigation. Suspects are charged with variouscrimes involving blue boxes and interstate gaming.

Keywords FBI; gambling; Los Angeles; blue box; Gilbert Lee Beckley(arrested); Milton Lee Boyd (arrested); Herbert Kaufman (arrested);John Owen Tyler (arrested); Henry Edward Loman (arrested); SamuelGreen (arrested); Gerald H. Kilgore (arrested); Francisco de Nigris(arrested); Virgil Salathiel (arrested); Harold Mahan (arrrested);Carl J. Clement (arrested); Joseph Soldis (arrested); RobertPelletier (arrested); Gray Hoffman (arrested); Wallace D. Kies(arrested); Larry L. Simms (arrested); Dr. Milton Birnbaum(suspect); William Ray Davis (suspect); Norman L. Rosenthal(suspect); Eugene A. Nolan (suspect); Alvin K. Bubis (suspect)

Source Newspaper Archive

The following pages may contain copyrighted material. We believe that our use of this material for non-commercial educational andresearch purposes constitutes "fair use" under Section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use this material for purposes thatgo beyond "fair use," you must obtain permission from the copyright owner, if any. While it will make us slightly sad to do so, wewill nonetheless comply with requests from copyright owners who want their material removed from our web site.

Page 2: Exploding The Phone db291 16 Arrested in Trans-U.S. Gaming Quizexplodingthephone.com/docs/dbx0291.pdf · ing Uganda, reports reaching here said. The T.asi African nation appeared

OK $5 BILLIONSPACE FUNDS

Story m Page

on Test

Vol. LXXIX—N«. tl*«4 PAGES

LONG BEACH, CAT.ff., MM), WEDNESDAY, MAY M, (MMP ' R T C E to C E N T S

HOME

EDITIONTFXEPHONF, HK *-U«1

HI

Tape BaresConflictingTestimony

Mri. QtadwyUr'»Lawyer At+«mpts

: to Bar RecordingBy UUWY LYNCH

i. r-r MM wrMrA. police tape recording was

introduced as evidence in thecoroner's inquest, into thedeath "of Leonard Deadwylertoday despite the objectionsh f . the attorney for Dead-wyler's widow, Barbara.' The recording of a state-(nent. by Gamalyet Ferguson—who was in th« car whenOeadwyler was shot by * po-lice officer—contains pass-ages thai conflict with testi-mony offered Tuesday byMrs. Deadwyler.* * * *

J O H N N I E I . COCHRAN,attorney for both Mrs. Dead-wyter and .Ferguson, appeareda.r. one point during the hear-ing to have blocked introduc-tion-of the tape, at least tem-porarily.

Ferguson was on the standwhen The inquest, in the maincounty courthouse in .Los An-(•eles recessed Tuesday. .Hewait recalled to the stand aitft a.m. today in the fifth dayof the hearings.

The tape was introducedand transcripts giver to thejJury- i

VICTORY HUGRobert Duncan grabs Penni Widmer, 18, at hishotel headquarters at Portland, Ore., after learn-ing he had captured the Democratic nominationfor Ins U. S. Senate over Howard Morgan. Hewill oppose Gov. Mark Hatfield in November.

16 Arrestedin Trans-U.S.Gaming QuizNine From L.A. Ar«a;Avoidance of PHon*Tolls Also ChargedWASHINGTON (#i — FBI

agents arrested IS men. nineof them from the l.os Angelesarea, and sought four moietoday in a nationwide crack-down on inierstate telephonetransmission of gambling in-formation.

Director .1. F.dgar Hooversaid the men, seized in nineslates from coast to coast,used »n electronic device;known as a "blue box" toavoid hilling for tong distancetelephone calls.

They thus avoided one nft h e check points of law en-forcement of f i e e r » keeping dr«n h«d eluded him, held the

SLASHER HITS AGAIN;NINE HORSES MAIMED

"" " i • • 'School-Bound Boy Seized iPrized Showo/ Bus Stop; Kidnaper Slain Animal CutAfter Child Freed inWooc/sAcPOSS Neck

long distance telephone bills.

Ffll COMPLAINTS charged

BRISTOL, Conn,man grabbed a school-hound6-year-old boy from a busstop today after other chil-

—A ed area, the man wounded apoliceman.

He was f i na l ly shot severaltimes after surrendering the

tabs on gambling — extensive child for about Ih iee hoursand then was killed by niAlbee, apparently suffered no

The youngster, Michael

posse of officers. effects from his ordeal.

dr«n for;th« school bus, sevenjdoors from the Albee home. |-

"He tried to pick up two'

War Critic Failsin Primary Race

THK TAP* OPENED\f>x Angelej Bet. Sgt.

withDon

Roberi 8. Duncan, stronghacker of Johnson administra1

tkm Viet. Mam war policies,Petmvkh identifying himselfas rh« interrogating officerand advising.Ferguson of hisconstitutional rights.. Then Petmvich asked Fer-guson if he remembered atelephone conversation , theday before in which Petrovicbsairl Ferguson told him he was(Continued Page A-fl, Col. 1)

won Oregon's Democratic of U.S. policy in. Southeastsenatorial : nomination going•way-in -a primary contest

c»n faces Republican Goy.Mark O. Hatfield, also a critic

where the conflict wassole major issue.

Rut the lopsided, count forDuncan over, peace candidateHoward Morganmuffle .opposition

failed: t a l k

voters uneasiness about theAsian war.

j the men with violating federalilaws against interstate trans.mission of wagering informa-Ition and fraud hy wire.i Hoover said »n "extensiveand detailed investigation hy:

JFBr agents throughoui the'lUntted States" led to the ar-rests in New York, Maryland,Georgia, Tennessee, N o r t hCarolina. Florida, Texas, Cali-fornia and New Jersey. , ;

At.ty. Gen. Nicholas Katzen-jn the general election Dun-|hach described the arrests as|

While encircled in > wood-, "isf*lh'r'

Asia, who likewise won Senate'Aomination by a wide mar-

the gin. The .Senate seat i* nowheld by retiring Mi urine Neil

(Continued Pag« A-R, Col. 1)

herger.

SEN. WAYNE Morse, Ore-

Uganda FiqhtingHearing Civil War

FraternitiesLose Battleon Eviction

My ROB SCHMIDT

Seven Long Beach StateCollege fraternities have lost

count, of the combined vote rneir ]ftgai hatt)e to remailT in

of gon Democrat »nd probablythe most vocal opponent, oftha t policy, saw the outcome

of victory for!

the incomplete

as i portemhis views.

Morse said

!of Republicans and Democrats["indicates strongly that theJohnson ndmimstratinn will

NAIROBI, Kenya (UP!) —Fresh fighting broke out todaybetween governmem troopsand rebel /actions inneighbor-ing Uganda, reports reachinghere said. The T.asi Africannation appeared on the brinkof civil war.

According to the reports,gunfire was continuing aroundth* palace of the king of fiu-gxnda, one of Uganda's fourkingdoms which has been ac-cused by the central govern-ment, of plotting secession.

Government troops and spe-.ipecial police units attackedcizl police un i t s attackedportedly arrested King F.dward Frederick Mutesa oncharges of treason.

Heavy security patrols werealso reported raging throughihe streets of Uganda's capitalof Kampala where the attackon the king's palace tookp l ace . Anounc.emenitroops had overrun the palace.

The statement also saM 22persons hart been killed in

disorders ir the country since]

he repudiated onNam war issue hv

the Vietsuhstan-

governmenl an-Tuesday said its

Monday.' ' T w o defenseless F.uro

peans also were killed,1' Ihe!statement said.

According to reports reacti-ng London. Kampala is cut

off hy road and rail from therest of ihe country hy armedribesmen. The rail l ink with

Entebbe, not far from Kam-pala, was reported cui. andall roads unsafe.

The raid hy Ugandan policeTuesday climaxed a longstanding power struggle be-tween Ihe king and president.Dr. Milton Obote, dating hacko Uganda's independence in1962.

King Freddie, as he wasnicknamed when serving as a;renadier guards officer in the

British army, became ihe firstpresident of Uganda af te r itr e c e i v e d its independencefrom Britain. He was oustedin February hy Oriole.

Hod IS Callson I, P-T Ad,Sold Truck

"Had 15 calls from myI,P-T wanl ad and soldmy 1964 panel ( r u c kw i t h camper," reportsByron Stockdale, 15852Tullow Lane, HuntingtonBeach.

Whether you're sellinga panel t r u c k or w»l!paneling, an I.P-T clasai-fied want td will furnishyou with customers. Forthe hot line to low cost,quick, and easy resultsphone HE 2-5969, fromOrange County phone ,TF.7-9102.

(Continued Page A-fi . Col. 5)

HIGH SKIRTSBANNED ATFINAL EXAMS

OXFORD. England (UPI1--Authorities at. SomervilleCollege ordered coeds to-day to have the i r thigh-high skirts in the cfoseiduring f ina l exams so theywon't hamper the concen-tration of male students.

Dean Mary Proudfont is-sued Ihe ban on nigh hem-lines.

"Short or mini-skirts canlook very attractive whena girl is standing up." Mrs.Proudfool said, "hut assoon as she sits down, theyhave « hahi l of riding upalmost to Ihe waist.

"H is nol f a i r lo ihe menstudents.

boy in a swap for a quart of *irls first'" she 8airf. bl" th*-v

saw him and ran. Rut then hewent: for Michael , who hadhis hack to him."

The father said MichaetAlbee, quoted Runn as saying, "Let's

go for a ride. )r won't he atnng ore."

Bunn drove to a countryroad on the outskirts of Ihisindustrial city and stoppedfirst at a home before leading

. Isald the brown-haired first•grader wasIset free,i An hour

not crying when

later, hf was aij t he family's home in nearbyTerryvilte, chewing bubble-gum and playing with hishaseha.ll cards.

! POI JCE SAID the abductor,^jAlh r r t Runn. a . 33-year-niriiwnter company employe, was'apparently deranged.

Michael's mother said her

Michael intofather said.

Assailant Visit*Riding Clubs atDominguei, Carson

Nine horses, including *prize Arabian show horse,were slashed during the nightin the Carson and Dominguezareas, possibly hy the sameassailant: or assailants whomutilated 17 horses in mid-March.

Long', deep cuts were in-flicted on the neck* of six'horses stahled at the Do-

the woods, his minguei Aiding Club, 15900'S. Main St., DominRuez. ;

son was snatched up by Dunn

STATE POLICE and offi-cers, from several town andcity department!! arrived soonafter. They knew Runn wasthe man ihey were after, they

as he waited with other chil-' (Continued Page A-f i . Col. fi)

Reagan Says Demos'Soft1 on Freedoms

By HOH HOUSE*!•««*« IMHr

Ronatd Reagan charged here spiril before 500 »f the

WHERE TO FIND ITGeorge Romney, presirien

tial possibility, announces candidacy for third term as Michigan governor. Story on PageA-.1.

Beach Combing—Pagt B-l.Bridge—Page J»-7.ClMiified—Pages E-3 In II.Comics—Page A-32.Crossword—Page A-3*.Death Notices—Page K-3.Rditorial—Page C-2.Financial—^Paige E-2.(•aorg* Rooeson—Pag* C-X.Omarr's Astrology—A-23.Shipping Tab re— Page E-3.•Sports—Pages JJ-1 to 4.Theaters—Page* C.-t, 7.TV, Radio—Page E-ll.Tktel, Temperatures—E-S.Wilson—Page C-*.Wnmen—Pages R-X to 7.

Kid Kidding? His BonkStickup A/o/e Not Funny

jtickup," I he

kidding," saidAmerics tellerWallace 10 its

"This i.<note rear!.

"You're.Rank ofTCarhc.rinewriter.

"No. I'm nol. Give meall your thousand dollarhills."

'T don't have any," Mrs.Wallace replied.

"Then give me all yourS500 bills."

"I don't have any nf thoseeither," she replied.

The w o u l d - b e bandilthen turned, and ran fromthe banfc *t 200 N. PacificAve,, Redondn Beach. He

fled with a companion whowas wait ing outskle.

Bank, employes ch»s«dthe suspect and caught himand 'his companion twoblocks away about I!:1Aa.m. Tuesday.

J u v e n i l e Sgt. Floyd' Schrader hooked Ihe pair, a

13-year-old hoy from SouthGate and his M-year-nldpal from Lynwood, on sus-picion of robbery.

"F was only joking," ihet.Vyear-old boy said.

"Bad joke." said Sgl.Schrader, who remandedIhe hoys to rounty juvenilehall to awail n hearing orthf charge.

residential areas.Superior C o u r I .1 u d g e|

Walter H. Odemar Tuesday!g r a n t e d the City of LongBeach a permanent injunctionagainst the fraternities main-taining houses in R4 areas.

• He ruled, however, rhat theeviction need not take placeinti! a f t e r the semester endsrrext. month.

The ousted fraternities areKappa Sigma, Sigma AlphaEpsilon, Sigma Phi 'Epsilon,Tail Kappa T-psilon, Zeta BetaTau. Phi Kappa Tan andSigma Pi. ;

* + * *ATTORNEY Richard Cant -

rell, representing Tau KappaEpsilon, Sigma Alpha F.psilonand Phi Kappa Tau. said hewas considering an appeal inthe case, and added "It's ashame tha i the City of i.ongBeach donates a million dol-lars worth of land on whichlo build a f ine college, thenturns around and preventsstudents it the college fromliving in the residential areas

|of the city."I .'t'dge Odemar s a i d heagreed with the city's con-tention that the fraternitieshad been in violation of thezoning code lince Nov. 17,IftfiX.

The city suit was filed Dec..11, 1964, hy Wnberr G. Austinof the city's attorney's office,and descrihed the fraternitiesas "public nuisances."

Meighbors of (he variousfraternities had complainedt. h a r t h e houses created aparking problem and, occa-sionally, were the source ofexcessive noise.

i Tuesday ihe Democratic ad-jministration disbelief in tr»-jdi t ional individual freedom,

"You could hardly blame jfocal control and states rightscould lead, in our lifetime, tostates being converted into

a man from le t t ing his eyeswander in such a s i tua t ion,and if his eyes wander, hisconcentraiion does. If hisconcentration goes, he isliable 10 f»il his exam."

Any gir l who arrives aithe examina t ion room in askirt above i h e knee w i l lhe lold [p go home andchange, ihe 4'2 - y e a r - oldd e a n said.

"administrat ive districts of(he federal government."

The Republican gubernato-ria l candidate, seeming to re-1

fleci ihe salutary news of anew poll showing him with awide margin over his principal GOP opponent, GeorgeChristopher, d e I i v e r e d his

fayetU Hot.el.And h» was more exuberant

in speaking before about. fiOOmore ar. the l.akewood Shop-ping Center, where a news-man touring with the Reagancampaign party said, "This is

ithe most he's been 'turned on'since we've been followinghim."

Reagan repeatedly returnedto his theme for welfare re-form in Cal i fornia , assigning

TWO OTHER horsesslashed, at: the Frisbee Horisi-

. Stables, 22509 S. Ver-mont.Ave,, Carson, *nd anoth-er horse was gashed at Rstable on Hamilton Street,between Torrance Boulevardand Knox Street in the TVi-mingiiez area. '

One of the horses slashedat the .Dominguez jtahles'wasan Arabian show horse valuedin excess* of $10,000. Hehad been ripped down the jaiw.The owner Floyd Priest, virtne had refused a $10,000 ftf-

jfer for the horse three month.'|j-|months ago.

OF THE SIX hnrjes slashedat the Dominguez cluh, theworst wound inflicted, was a15-inch cut, two inches deep,on one horse. The other cwswere about 10 inches long.Owner* of the animals wereidentified as A! Davis, «0t In-glewood: Sharon Katz, 30,'i.osAngeles, and Dorothy McN<-mar. 45. of 1530 Van TressAve.

the.state 's "bad business cli-good'(Continued Page A-6. Col. I)

WeatherTOWIftHT Mft» THUftSDAV

I.. 8. A R E A — M o s t l yclear. Hlfh hy "*n» to-day: (3.

DESERTS—MVwily cleantiigh tempentur* »M.

MOUNTAINS — Clear;

Wilmington,light palomino and ' a

HORSE SLASHER AT W01JK AGAIN, INJURES $IMO* ARABIAN HORSEOwner Floyd Priest ([-*ft), T)r. James C. Jenien Examine Slifhai J>w

dark' roan horse were slashedar the Frisbee stables. On«was owned by Richard Fris-bee. and the other by StanF.lmore.

THE BROWN mar« slashedal the third stable was valuedai .$200 hy the owner, JohnWinkier of tfawthorne.

A $3,000 reward was of-fered after the 17 horses wereslashed in mid-March.

At that time, deputies saidtwo persons might, have heeh'nvolvcd.

In one series of cuttings,the wounds were deep andlong with clean edges—in-flicted, deputies said, by asharp weaipon.

In another aeries of slash;ings, in the Uong Beach-Roll-ing Hills area, 12 horses werecut, hut not. so deeply andapparently hy * duller weap-on which did not cul ascleanly.|

'London BanditsGrab $274.000

LONDON (ffi — Two menarmed with double-barrelledshotguns seized an armored!security express truck andescaped • with 9R.OOO pounds(1274,400).

The robbers locked the loneguard in the truck's securitydepartment. Tht other twosecurity guards were deliver.',ing cash at the time to a hank"in the busy Bayswater sectiorrof London.

The armored car later was.found with its !o*d of cashbags missing, Th« guard, Wal-ter .l,ee. .17. waslocked inside.

Page 3: Exploding The Phone db291 16 Arrested in Trans-U.S. Gaming Quizexplodingthephone.com/docs/dbx0291.pdf · ing Uganda, reports reaching here said. The T.asi African nation appeared

LM( MM*, 04*, Wtf, MW

WITNESSES AT DEADWYLER INQUEST IN LOS ̂ ^̂Gamalyel Ferguson (Left) Was Passenger in Car; Policewoman Barbara Johnson (Right) Disputed Widow

-Stiff PMIll »» 101 IHUMWAY

DA Challenges Inquest Testimony(Continued from Page A-l) J "I will discontinue playing was recalled to the stand an

intoxicated on the day of theshooting.

Ferguson's voice on thetapa replied, "Yes, I was."

Cochran jumped up fromhis seat and.grabbed DeputyDist. Atty. John Provenzanoby the sleeve. Provenzano,who, through a mutual andunusual errangement, has ad-dressed Cochran's questionsto the witness, said:

* t * *"IF IT WOULD please the

court, I would like to havethe tape stopped."

Cochran and Provenzano

of the tape at this time, butwill not state that it will nobe played at a later time during the hearing," Langhausereplied.

* f ;• s,

T E S T I M O N Y THENswitched to an experimeniFerguson said he conductecwith the death car. He salehe tried to see if he or any-one else could reach the igni-tion key through the openwindow on the passenger sideof the car.

Provenzaro, placing ques-tion's posed by C o c h r a n

went into conference with asked Ferguson, who said hehearing officer Charles Lang- s five-feet nine-inches tallhauser.

During the six minute con-ference the jury continued toread the transcript.

After the conference, Coch-ran made a formal objectionon the grounds playing of thetape would violate Ferguson'sconstitutional rights in theevent Ferguson was subse-quently ordered to trial.

'Could you do it?':"No," Ferguson replied."Did you have someone

else who was taller try?" Provenzano asked.

"Yes," Ferguson said."How tall?" Provenzano

asked."Six-feet, one-inch," Fergu-

son replied.

I Reagan CallsDemos 'Soft1

on Freedoms(Continued from Page A-l)

mate" in large measure to the"regressive taxation" neededto!support state welfare pro-grams.

* * 'v V

AGAIN, IN defending hisproposals for $245 million inbudget cuts, which he saidwould still leave the newbudget with a $200-million in-crease over the last one, heasked rhetorically, "If unem-ployment is at a six-year-lowin California, why (the needfor) $88.5 million higher wel-fare cost?" This includes, hesaid, $69 million more inmental hospital costs overthe past four years whilethere are 6,000 fewer peoplein them.

Reagan said deserving wel-fare recipients should get notonly the necessities of lifebut some of the comforts aswell, but that he opposes mis-uses of welfare, the third-gen-eration welfare families andthe "paid vacation—welfareas a way of life" abuses.

The badly managed unem-ployment insurance program,he said, would mean "thecupboard is bare" for legiti

"Could he reach it?" Pro-venzano asked.

"No," Ferguson said.# V ¥ ifc

A FEW MINUTES later,after an hour of testimonyand arguments, the hearingwas recessed for 10 minuteswith the hint the district at-torney's office might producea surprise witness.

Instead, however, Ferguson

Langhauser ordered the diputed tape played.

For three hours TuesdaMrs. Deadwyler, 25, dresse<in a black-and-white-stripematernity smock and generaly composed, spelled out heversion in consistent detail.

The minute she steppe<down, however. Deputy DisAtty. John Provenzano calleto the stand a police worn awho contradicted some detailof the widow's story.* » * *

NEXT, Provenzano d r ef r o m Ferguson, testimonthat seriously countered Mr,Deadwyler's story.

Tuesday, as the fourth daof hearings drew to a closeFerguson contradicted MrsDead wyler about whether thDeadwyler car, shortly beforpolice halted it, was passe3y a fire engine, siren wailing

4 * * *FERGUSON, who ownet

the car Deadwyler was drivng said he had asked Dead

wyler to drive "because I be:ame pretty nervous" whe

Mrs. Deadwyler complaineof labor pains during what hcalled "an outing." Mrs. Deadwyler testified the car waleaded to County General stand,

Hospital because of her painsOn the way to Oie hospita

Ferguson said, "f was just ex:ited about the way Deadwyer changed lanes back an

Troops Rout Protestersin S. Viet Nam Capital

mately out-of-work persons ifthe state were to suffer a re-cession because the fund ispaying out more than is com-ing in.

* * * *ASKED, in a question ses-

sion, what he would do aboutcrime, Reagan said he wouldgive priority to reintroductionof anti-crime bills authoredby Long Beach Assemblyman

SAIGON (K) — Hundredof anti-government demonstrators scattered before riopolice and paratroopers in Sagon today after the mayobanned a threatened Euddhisprotest "march of peace." ThBuddhist leadership bowed tthe ban.

Premier Nguyen Cao Ky1

crackdown on his opponent,also paid dividends elsewhereThe commander of the rebelious 1st Army Division iHue said his affirmation cloyalty to Ky Tuesday alsincluded the thousands ctroops under him.

Brig. Gen. Phan Xuan Nhuatold Associated Press correspondent Bob Gassaway iHue that his men had returne<to their posts and were nlonger helping armed youthof the Buddhist struggle movement man roadblocks in thnorthern city.

* * * :,THE U.S. vice consul i

Hue, James R. Bullington oChattanooga, Tenn., saiNhuan was considering "appropriate action" on the barricades which were erectedlast week to stop any troopthat Ky might send into th

uy jL.ung ueacn Assemoiyman m-v\.y nciiner u. uenGeorge Deukmejian, passed Nguyen Huu Co reported InKir fV»«i Tof f T nn!<-.1n*i._n U..4 IJa NatlfT f riaf turn tj-m •**!!!by the last Legislature, butpocket vetoed by Gov. Ed-mund G. Brown. He said thebiggest single factor workingagainst better crime controlis the state's interpretationof preemption—-preventing lo-cal ordinances in certainareas of crime-fighting.

Reagan told cheering hun-dreds at the Lakewood Shop-ping Center he would have an

city.Deputy Premier Lt. Gen

open and public inquiry intomisconduct on the Berkeleycampus. He told them he had

blatant sexual.

evidence ofmisconduct" in connectionwith a Viet Nam Day Commil tee dance in the" men's yeargym there, details of which"would read like pornographic

Nang that two top mil!tary leaders in the revolthere had surrendered to thgovernment and were flownto Saigon for interrogationHe identified them as Lt. ColDam Quang Yue and MajTon Thai Tuong, both commanders of rebel troops inthe Tinh Hoi Pagoda, whichfell Monday.

Several persons were injured and a number of Buddhist monks and nuns werearrested in Saigon as policemoved on the demonstratorswith tear gas in one of theheaviest downpours of the

literature." The inquiry shouldfix responsibility, he said, andthose responsible should beseparated from the university.

THE PARATROOPS set uppositions on streets. Manyuniu were armed with ma-chine guns,

Ky's opponents demon-

strated peacefully in threother cities, including thnorthern Buddhist stronghokof Hue, while governmensupporters rallied in another

Although the political crisikept many government troopout of the field, a government spokesman said Vielnamese soldiers killed 58 VieCong in five ground actionTuesday, including a heavyCommunist attack on the central coast that failed to dislodge the outnumbered defenders.

* * * tiW H I L E FIGHTING re

mained at a low level generally, the U. S. Command disclosed a new sweep operationby the U. S. 173rd AirbonwDivision and the Royal Australian regiment in thijungles 40 miles southeast o w ucllc]Saigon. So far 20 Viet Cong mistakenhave been killed in the nine-day operation.

American forces reporterkilling 29 Viet Cong in twoother continuing operations.

U.S. jets flew 24 missionsagainst North Viet Nam, ineluding an attack on the RedRiver Valley rail line to RedChina. The number of missions was again far below theaverage before the monsoonrains curbed the air waragainst the north.

* * * *THE U.S. MILITARY Com

mand had ordered all Ameri-cans off Saigon's streets thisafternoon in anticipation o(trouble during the scheduledmarch from the Buddhist In-stitute, focal point of past disorders.

Some 2,000 Buddhist fol-owers tried to crash throughhe barbed wire around thenstitute but were driven off

by a police tear gas barrage.Saigon's Mayor Van Van

Cua banned the demonstrm-lon and ordered his police to3ick up any monks on thestreets for identification atity hall. Leaders of the Bud-

dhist Institute agreed to thisrocedure, saying they haduthorized no demonstration*oday.

forth. (And) Mrs. Deadwyle.. frightened me. She didn

say any th ing , she jusgroaned."

Ferguson added that hwas thinking Mrs. Deadwylewould deliver en route.

But asked if he saw the firengine that Mrs. Detdwylehad described in her testimony, he responded: "I didn'see any."

Throughout his iestimonjFerguson nervously shoute<answers before Provenzanhad completed his questions.

At one point he refused tisay how much he had bee:drinking before the "outing;His refusal was on the ad vieof attorney Johnnie L. Cochran Jr., who is representinhim and the widow.

Cochran, two years out olaw school, has drawn ouother witnesses with fineljtoned ques t ions , posecthrough Provenzano in an unusual relaxation of normal inquest procedure. Not untihe examination of Fergusoniad Cochran ever appearsless than composed; as Tuesday's hearing ended hiseemed nervous.

BEFORE Ferguson took thipolicewoman Barban

fohnson told of questioningiirs. Deadwyler at Countyireneral Hospital s e v e r a

hours after the shooting.The policewoman said Mrs

Jeadwyler had told her o:ending her husband for beeihortly before the "outing.'

At the time of the interrogaion, the policewoman noted

Mrs. Deadwyler's breathmelled of an alcoholic beverige.

"I don't believe she wasirunk, but I believe she was

under the influence of alcohoi," the policewoman said.* * a *

POLICE OFFICERS andther witnesses have time and

again contradicted each othe:n testimony about the shootng.

Deadwyler was shot by Oficer Jerold M. Bova, 23, whoIBS said, although not yet un

oath, that his gun disbarged accidentally arid fa

tally wounded Deadwylerwhen the man's car suddenlyurched after Bova reached ino grab the ignition keys.

Mrs. Deadwyler, though;ave a different version in herestimony Tuesday.

She said after a police carad pulled alongside whileer husband was driving hero General Hospital, in the

belief she was inabor, "My husband motionedo the policeman because heaw a place (to stop) at theide. We stopped them. Theyid n't stop us."Today, Mrs. Deadwyler sat

uietly in the audience listenng to Ferguson's testimonynd his voice on tape.

LBJ Backeron Viet WinsOregon Test(Continued from Page A-l)

tial majority of the voters olmy state."

Morse, who has said thiIf Duncan won he would votefor Hatfield, added:

ALTHOUGH Duncan iwinning the Democratic pri-mary, the combined vote for

lov. Hatfield and HowardMorgan predicts the electionof Hatfield to the Senate inNovember!

"I am satisfied that by November the American peoplein state after state will stopPresident's Johnson's bulletsin Viet Nam with ballots inthe United States. A cont i n u e d escalation by theUnited States of the immoraand illegal war in Viet Namis a sin against humanity."

There was no immediatecomment from the W h i t eHouse.. Duncan, a two-term congressmtn, and Morgan, a former member of the FederaPower Commission, stood to;ether on domestic mattersThey argued only about VietNam. Morgan called U.S. in-volvement there a tragic er-ror; Duncan said it is neces'sary.

THEIR CLASH echoed thedebate that has raged in Con-gress and on campuses acrossthe nation. But in Oregon, forthe first time, the votersjudged the debaters.

With 1,437 of 2,946 Oregonprecincts reporting, Duncanhad 64% of the votes, Mor-gan 33% and a third candi-date 3%.

Voters rendered their judg-ments in primary elections inFlorida, Oklahoma and Ken-tucky, too. The most startlingdecision was Miami MayorRobert King High's rematch:riumph over Florida's Gov.Haydon Burns.

In other major races:Republican Sen. John Sher-

man Cooper of Kentucky wonrenomination without seriousopposition. John Y o u n gBrown, a college classmate,former congressman and Sen-ate rival 20 years ago, easilywon the Democratic Senatenomination.

—Preston Moore of Okla-homa City, former nationalAmerican Legion command-er, blunted the comeback bidof former Gov. RaymondGary and won the Democraticnomination for governor ofJklahoma. State Sen. Dewey

Bartlett of Tulsa won the Re-publican gubernatorial nomi-nation over John N. HappyCamp.

—Republican Pat J. Patter-son outdistanced Don Kin-caid, who had solicited John

Birch Society backing, for thenomination to challenge Ok-ahoma's Democratic Sen .

Fred R. Harris in November.—Former Rep. M. G. Sny-

der of Kentucky was nomi-nated for the House from thenewly designed 4th District,opping two rivals in a racehat renewed the Republican

split of 1964. Snyder, a con-ervative, fought for the cause

of Barry Goldwater two yearsago and lost his House seatn the Democratic landslide.Moderate and liberal Repub-icans, in power in the Louis-'ille area, lined up againstinyder, calling him an ex-remist. Snyder won easily,fe faces State Sen. John Mo-oney of Covington in Novem-

ber.—Secretary of State Tom

McCall won the Republican

NVADES STOREDeer logged NearLingerie Section

ALTON, 111. (&—A white-tailed deer leaped throughthe window of a departmentstore Tuesday and wreckedseveral displays.

Police Sgt. D a l e Grillsand conservation agentDonald Hastings used atranquilizer gun to bring thedeer down just past the lin-gerie section. The deer wastaken to a veterinarian fortreatment of cuts receivedwhen it jumped through theplate glass window.

Hastings said.he wouldrelease the deer in a wood-ed area near Alton. The ani-mal apparently wanderednto the city from that area.

Damage was estimated atseveral hundred dollars.

gubernatorial nomination inOregon; State Treasurer Rob-ert Straub was the Demo-ratic choice.

ABDUCTED LAD SAFEMichael Albee comes down hill with his dad, Donald T. Albw (left), and apolice officer after his rescue today from Albert L. Bunn, 33, who had ab-ducted the child at a school bus stop earlier. Police killed Bunn in rescue.

Boy Seized;Posse SlaysAbductor(Continued from Page A-l)

said, because his license number had been taken.

Albee, who works as an inspector at an aircraft factorysoon arrived. At no timecould he see Bunn or his sonhe said, but the voices of bothcarried clearly out of thiwoods.

Policeman Joseph Nocera oSristol was hit in the midseclion by a blast ifrom Bunn'sshotgun. His condition was reported later as satisfactory.

Police, using a poweredmegaphone, kepi urging thman to come out and givehimself up or at least set theboy free.

Bunn answered numeroustimes, refusing to give up. Bui'inally, Albee said, he calledout, "You bring me upquart of water and I'll giveyou the boy."

THE BOY also had beenshouting to the posse.

"I can't come out," he criedTil b* shot."

Albee, meanwhile, was hurrying to a nearby home forhe water.Wilfred Morin, a dog warden

mown to Bunn, was chosenthe abductor to be the

ntermediary in the swap."Willie, you come up alone,'

Bunn called.Morin started up into the Miami

woods, carrying the waterand calling to Bunn to reveawhere he was.

A short time later, Morinand the youngster came backout.

tThen

ALBEE SAID he and the'oungster had been reunitedmly a few moments when heleard a shot and then axjlice officer's shout: "Allright, close in!"

Moments later, he said,here were several more shots

silence.Capt. Thomas O'Brien, a

tate police officer, said Bunnwas shot by Sgt. Stanley Bar-on of the Bristol Police De->artment.

Bunn was concealed behindhastily erected barricade of

ocks on the wooded hillside,3'Brien said, but Barton wasble to get to a higher pointjehind him and called downo Bunn to surrender.

Bunn replied by shooting atle sergeant and then Bartonired on him, O'Brien said.

Why doesCLUNY

SCOTCHoutsell

MwnU Walker

WMf« HOTMin California?

Taste CLUNYtonight and $(? 99find out why! 9FIFTH

16 Held in InterstatePhone-Gambling Probe

(Continued from Page A-l)'a crippling blow to the

users of eletronic devices de-signed to circumvent to l lcharges on long distance tele-phone calls."

An FBI spokesman said the'blue box" — technically

known as a multi frequencysignal generator — cuts outthe telephone company whena long distance call is placedin a manner similar to whathappens when a long distancecaller gets a busy signal or noanswer. Thus there is no rec-ord of the call, no possibilityof t r a c i n g it, and no billw h i c h could be used bygambling investigators.

* * * *HOOVER SATO the follow

ing individuals were chargedwith interstate transmissionof w a g e r i n g information,which carries a maximumpenalty of two years' im-prisonment and a $10,000 fine:

Gilbert Lee Beckley, 53,Bay Harbor Islands, Fla., de-scribed by the FBI as "one ofthe major-bookmakers in theUnited States." He was ar-rested in New York City.

Thomas Milton Boyd, 36,Nashville, Tenn.

Herbert Kaufman,, 55 ofBaltimore, a real - estateagent.

John Owen Tyler, 50, Con-yers, Ga.

Henry Edward Loman, 50,of Greensboro, N.C.

Samuel Green, 52, of DadeCounty, Fla., president ofMultiple Sports News Service,

Gerald H. Kilgore, 30, Re-seda, Calif., publisher of J. K.Sports Journal of Los Ange-les.

Francisco de Nigris, 35, ofCliffside Park, N.J., a musi-cian.

* * * *HOOVER SAID the -follow-

ing were charged with violat-ing the fraud-by-wire lawswhich carry maximum sen-tences of five years in prisonand a $1,000 fine:

Virgil Salathiel, 48, of Dal-las, Tex.

Harold Mahan, 47, of Bev-<erly Hills, Calif.

Carkl J. Clement, 55. ofSepulveda, Calif.

Joseph Soldis, 36, of 4612Sharynne Lane, Torrance,Calif.

Robert Pelletier, 41, of 904Esplanade, Redondo Beach,Calif.

Gray Hoffman, 40, of Bur-bank, Calif.

Hoover said two individualswvere charged with aiding and.abetting fraud by wire, acrime carrying a maximumsentence of five, years inprison and a $1,000 fine. Theyare Wallace D. Kies, 28, ofRiverside, Calif., and LarryL. Simms, 31, of Altadena,Calif.

A 17th man is ready forarrest. Dr. Milton Bimbaumof Los Angeles was chargedwith fraud by wire, the FBIsaid, and was to surrender tofederal officials today.

Being sought as fugitivesare William Ray Davis, 37, ofDallas, who is reportedly liv-ing in London and is charged

aiding and abettingfraud by wire; Norman 1..Rosenthal, 36, of Nor thMiami, Fla., charged with in-terstate transmission of wag-ering information; Eugene A.Nolan, 36, of New Orleans,charged with interstate trans-mission, and Alvin K. Bubis,34, of Los Angeles, chargedwith transmission and fraudby wire.

. "'S 'of with

Finns Will PicketDuring Rusk Visit

HELSINKI, Finland (/et~A.Finnish protest group called"The Committee of theFriends of Viet Nam" is plan-ning a street rally and hun-ger strike next week duringthe visit of U.S. Secretary ofState Dean Rusk. .

Rusk is scheduled to visitHelsinki May 31-June 2.

"the MUSI-CALOir.r 40 run »l ftitJ Cifirlnc»—1 Hurt tf fil

PIANO [ ORGANWiriHiir, Ctlckirlnt, HiMMiri, Inny, Gilhnmtn, Cun

3 FLOORS fO CHOOSE FROM

RENT$2«r»K« tf frWt.|«, flnr ,

M»IMS tr.i ftntir rahrnt — ALL MUST U.HiMMOID MGM SIM; SflttT MAN* $299;

UPRIGHT nai 175 AND MART MOKE

CURTIS MATHIS, FACTHT DIRECT - giSCHJNT MICES

C O L O R T VSTEREO-THEATERLow* pric» ANYWHERE . . .COLOR TV CONSOLE WithSf«r*o FWe and AM-PM Ra-dio. Decorator hirdvood <*b!-n«f, «utomitic dcg«uit*ng —iuforrnfjc cofor control—25,000-volt ctiissis. 499

HEW COIOK TV htm «»MS WITH TRADE

OHM MOHSAT A HO TUDA1 HUES TILL f

PIANOS • ORGANS • ALLMUSICAL INSTRUMENTSTELEVISION & STEREON»I«ll I*UI*CI*»* «U4I*

334 PINE AVENUELONG BEACH CAL

436*9227


Recommended